Jonathan Edwards on the Problem of Faith and History …
Published in the Scottish Journal of Theology, Vol. 31, pp. 217-228.
The primary value of historical arguments is that they cause us to consider the gospel more carefully.
The primary value of historical arguments is that they cause us to consider the gospel more carefully.
The sight of Christ’s glory is the ground of—not the equivalent to—faith.
How did John Piper come to appreciate the life and work of Edwards?
John Piper answers questions about his messages given during "Jonathan Edwards and the American Experience," a conference hosted at Wheaton College by the Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals.
In this article, John Piper asks "What does it matter what Edwards thought?" and then lets Edwards teach us in his own words.
What characteristics ought to mark the life of a Christian sojourner?
“One of the reasons that the world and the church need Jonathan Edwards 300 years after his birth is that his God-entranced vision of all things is so rare and yet so necessary” (p. 21).
Life of the Mind The Glory of God Christian Hedonism